Society
Australian floods toll rises
Updated: 2011-01-04 08:10
(China Daily)
A flood gauge on the Fitzroy River shows the rising water compared to past flood high water marks in Rockhampton, Australia on Sunday. Floodwaters that cover an area the size of France and Germany combined are draining slowly toward Australia's northeast coast, filling bulging rivers to overflowing and inundating at least 22 towns and cities in the cattle and fruit and vegetable farming region. Queensland Police / Associated Press |
SYDNEY - Raging Australian floodwaters claimed two more lives on Monday, when a man drowned after his car was washed into a flooded creek and the body of another swept from a small boat was recovered.
The torrential rains which have lashed the state and created a massive flood zone have now claimed 10 lives since Nov 30, police said.
In the latest fatality, a man died after the car he was in was washed into a flooded creek as it was being driven across a causeway, prompting more warnings for residents not to drive through flooded roads and to obey road closures.
"They are there for a purpose and that purpose is the protection of life", Chief Superintendent Alistair Dawson told reporters in Brisbane.
The man and his companion attempted to swim to safety after the boat began filling with water and he was last seen stranded on a sand bar. The other man made it to safety and raised the alarm.
Floodwaters sweeping through northeastern Australia have prompted a string of rescues, including that of a group attempting to cross a swamped causeway in the northern Gulf of Carpentaria region late on Saturday.
Police managed to save three children and another adult from the car but a 41-year-old woman disappeared before they could reach her. Her body was recovered later.
Since Nov 30 there have been seven other deaths related to the floods, including that of a 17-year-old girl who drowned after her foot became stuck between rocks while trying to walk across a swollen and rising creek.
Three other people drowned when their vehicles were swept away while a teenage boy and a man drowned in separate incidents after jumping into flowing waterways.
Another man died after being swept off a footbridge in the state's far north on Dec 28.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Monday warned people to beware of the risks.
"Floodwaters are dangerous," she told reporters in Sydney. "Fast moving water, rising water is dangerous."
"So I would ask everybody to abide by the instruction of emergency personnel and police as to how to move around and deal with this dangerous situation," she added.
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